Captive of Kadar Read online




  Enslaved by their desires

  Kadar Soheil Amirmoez couldn’t keep his eyes off the blond-haired beauty strolling through Istanbul’s ancient marketplace. So when he sees her in trouble, Kadar is only too willing to act...

  Amber Jones has never met such an intensely commanding man as Kadar. Her reactions to him both scare and excite her—maybe that’s because he is at first her hero, then her captor!

  This wasn’t the journey of exploration Amber came to Istanbul for, but as the exotic atmosphere seduces her, she soon becomes his willing captive and he a very attentive keeper!

  Amber could hardly tell him the reason her lungs had squeezed so tight in her chest. “I...” she started, searching for some kind of excuse. “I don’t even know your name.”

  He inclined his head. “I apologize, we seem to have skipped the usual formalities. My name is Kadar Soheil Amirmoez, at your service.”

  She blinked, still shaken. “I’m hopeless with names. I’m never going to remember that.” He smiled a little, the first time she had witnessed him smile, and shadowed planes shifted and angles found curves and his dark eyes found a spark, and where before he’d been merely striking with his strong dark looks, now he tipped over into truly dangerous. Her heart gave a tiny lurch.

  She had reason to feel fear.

  And still, she was glad he’d found her again.

  “A simple Kadar will suffice. And you are?”

  “Amber. Plain old Amber Jones.”

  “Never plain,” he said in that rich, deep voice.

  She remembered the way he’d looked at her across the market with eyes as dark as midnight and lit with red-hot coals, and she remembered, too, the warm weight of his hand on her shoulder and the promise his touch conveyed.

  And maybe the new brave Amber wasn’t as far away from her as she’d feared.

  Because she wanted more.

  Desert Brothers

  Bound by duty, undone by passion!

  These sheikhs may not be brothers by blood, but they are united by the code of the desert.

  Their power and determination is legendary and unchallenged—until unexpected encounters with women strong enough to equal them threaten their self-control...

  Read the two concluding stories in Trish Morey’s exciting quartet of searing passion and sizzling drama!

  This month meet:

  Kadar & Amber in Captive of Kadar

  Look out for:

  Shackled to the Sheikh

  the final installment of Trish Morey’s

  Desert Brothers series

  Coming soon!

  TRISH MOREY

  Captive of Kadar

  Trish Morey always fancied herself a writer, so why she became a chartered accountant is anyone’s guess. But once she’d found her true calling, there was no turning back. Mother of four budding heroines and wife to one true-life hero, Trish lives in an idyllic region of South Australia. Is it any wonder she believes in happy-ever-afters? Find her at trishmorey.com or facebook.com/trish.morey.

  Books by Trish Morey

  Harlequin Presents

  A Price Worth Paying?

  Bartering Her Innocence

  The Heir from Nowhere

  His Prisoner in Paradise

  His Mistress for a Million

  The Chatsfield

  Tycoon’s Temptation

  Desert Brothers

  Duty and the Beast

  The Sheikh’s Last Gamble

  Bound by his Ring

  Secrets of Castillo Del Arco

  21st Century Bosses

  Fiancée for One Night

  Dark-Hearted Desert Men

  Forbidden: The Sheikh’s Virgin

  Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.

  To all the wonderful readers who have written and emailed asking when they might see Kadar’s story, thank you so much and here it is. I love this story, I hope you do, too.

  Rashid’s story, the final of the Desert Brothers, will be coming soon!

  And to Carol, just because.

  Trish

  xxx

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  EPILOGUE

  EXCERPT

  CHAPTER ONE

  HE SAW HER in the Spice Market, just another tourist strolling through Istanbul’s ancient marketplace, famed for selling spices and dried fruits and a thousand different kinds of tea. Just another wide-eyed tourist, even if she did come complete with blond hair and blue eyes and red jeans that hugged her curves like a second skin.

  Not that he was interested.

  It was mere curiosity that slowed his footsteps as she lifted her camera to take a photograph of a shop hung with glass lanterns of every imaginable design and colour; nothing more than curiosity that kept him watching as the stallholder took advantage of her stillness, holding out a plate of his best Turkish delight for her to sample. She took a faltering step backwards when she realised she hadn’t gone unnoticed, murmuring apologies and shaking her head, setting the messy knot of blond hair at the back of her head and its loose tendrils dancing, but the plate followed her retreat, the eyes of the seller joining in his entreaties for her to just have one tiny taste.

  Kadar’s feet faltered at the stall opposite—it wasn’t his usual but he was curious, he told himself, and this shop would do—and ordered the dates he had come to buy for Mehmet, before looking over his shoulder to see whose will was stronger, the stallholder’s or the tourist’s. The vendor had her attention now, all the time smiling, a toothy smile in a crinkled face as warm as it was persuasive while he continued to engage her, plucking countries from the air as they did here, guessing where she was from—America? England?

  As if knowing when she was beaten, the woman gave in, and said something he couldn’t make out, but the owner grinned and assured her exuberantly that the Turkish people loved Australians, as she plucked a piece from the plate before her and raised it to her lips.

  A long way from home, he registered vaguely, his attention diverted as he handed over a large note in exchange for his dates and was asked to wait a few moments while someone fetched his change. He didn’t mind. It was no hardship waiting. The tourist had a mouth worth watching. Her lips were lush and wide and still wearing the shadow of a smile as she popped the sweet into her mouth. A moment later her smile was back in full force, her blue eyes wide with delight and, even surrounded by bright displays of every dried fruit imaginable, every sweetly scented tea and vat of brightly coloured fragrant spice, still she lit up the vaulted marketplace like a lantern.

  He felt that smile in a kick of heat that stirred his loins and turned his thoughts primal.

  It was a long time since he’d had a woman.

  It was a while since he’d felt himself tempted.

  He was tempted now.

  His eyes scanned just long enough to be sure there was no hint of a partner lurking nearby, and no sticker on her jacket to indicate a tour group nearby ready to swallow her up and spirit her away.

  She was alone.<
br />
  He could have her if he wanted.

  The knowledge came to him with the certainty of one who had rarely been turned down by a woman who was available, and after being propositioned by plenty who were not. It wasn’t arrogance. Call it history or call it experience, the percentages were in his favour, nothing more.

  She was still smiling, her face animated. She was like a burst of sunshine and colour amidst a sea of black winter coats and dark headscarves and she was ready to buy, already reaching into her bag.

  He could have her...

  And that same unerring certainty that told him he could take her assured him that she would be worth the taking.

  Oh yes, she would be worth it.

  He could picture himself lazily peeling away the layers that covered her, one by one. Slowly unzipping and stripping away the leather jacket that lovingly hugged her breasts and moulded to her waist, before peeling away those shameless red jeans from her long legs. What layers remained would be similarly discarded until she was revealed, in all her fair-skinned splendour, and then he would unwind the honey-blond hair behind her head and let it tumble down over her shoulders to curl and whisper against breasts plumped and peaked and ripe for the taking.

  Her mouth would taste sweet, like the Turkish delight that she’d sampled, and her blue eyes would be dark with heat and she would smile with moistened lips and reach for him...

  He could see it all.

  He could have it all, and it was all within his grasp...

  Then, as if she was aware she was being watched—almost as if aware of what he was thinking—her eyes fell on him—eyes not just blue, he realised in that moment, but vividly so, almost the colour of lapis lazuli itself. As he watched they darkened, like stone heated over flame, almost as if she recognised him, almost as if she was responding.

  She blinked once, and then again. He watched her smile slide away then, even as her eyes turned smoky with recognition as they kept that connection across the bustling marketplace.

  Until the stallholder alongside her said something that snagged her attention and she blinked again, and this time turned away. A shake of her head and wave of her hand later, and she was practically fleeing from the market, leaving the disappointed vendor wondering how his in-the-bag sale had gone so wrong.

  A tap on his own shoulder saw Kadar presented with his change and an apology for making him wait.

  He accepted both the same way as he accepted her vanishing act.

  Philosophically.

  Because he wasn’t interested.

  Not really.

  After all, he did have plans to visit Mehmet.

  Besides, he told himself again, with maybe just a pang of regret, he wasn’t looking for a woman. Especially not one who would flee like a startled rabbit.

  He left the rabbits to the boys who liked to chase.

  In his world, the women came to him.

  * * *

  What the hell had just happened?

  Amber Jones stumbled blindly through the market, past shops with their displays of dried fruits and spices and all manner of bright and beautiful souvenirs, ignoring the calls and the banter from stallholders on either side as she passed. Because everything was fuzzy. Nothing was distinct or clear, the sights and sounds of the market that she’d found so fascinating just minutes ago now all a blur. All because she’d been blindsided by a man with golden skin and whose eyes had burned bright like a brazier at midnight.

  A man who’d been watching her through those heated eyes.

  It had been more than any niggling prickle of awareness—it had been a compulsion that had made her turn her head to catch him staring—and she’d felt the gaze from his dark eyes like a rush of heat—a darkly heated wave that had sent a ripple of promise down her spine and collected in a hot swirling pool deep down in her belly.

  Why had he been watching her?

  And why had she seen sex in the dark depths of his eyes?

  Hot sex.

  Jet lag, she thought, searching for logic to lend explanation for the sensation. She was bone weary and operating in a time zone nine hours later than her own. In three hours her body would expect her to be tucked up for the night in her bed back in Sydney, whereas here in Istanbul it was barely time for lunch. No wonder it suddenly felt so crowded in the marketplace. No wonder it suddenly felt so hot.

  Fresh air was what she needed—to feel the late winter breeze on her skin and let the sea air cool down her heated, clearly travel-weary body.

  She stepped outside the entry to the marketplace, reefing off her scarf and then her jacket, breathing deep of the cool air as it stripped away her heat and soothed fractured nerves and calmed a panicked mind.

  And with relief came logic and rational thought along with a little disappointment in herself.

  So much for being the strong, independent woman she’d promised herself she’d be when she’d decided to venture halfway around the world to follow in her great-great-great-grandmother’s footsteps. Clearly the old Amber was still lurking, the risk-averse Amber who’d settle for second best rather than chase after what she really wanted, if she could be spooked by a look from just one man.

  Because it hadn’t been jet lag at all.

  It had been him, with his face drawn in slashes of the artist’s charcoal.

  Him, who owned the space he occupied with such a supreme confidence, so that the air fairly shimmered around him.

  She shivered, this time nothing to do with the cool January air, irrationally—insanely—missing that sudden flush of heat that had warmed her core and made her think of long nights and hot sex. How had that happened in just one moment in time? In all the two years they’d been together, Cameron had never once managed to turn her thoughts to long, hot sex with just one heated look.

  But the stranger in the market had.

  How could that even be possible?

  And yet his eyes had drawn her, compelling and insistent and communicating to her a dark promise that her body seemed instinctively to understand—and instinctively to respond to.

  A dark promise that had spawned dark thoughts of all kinds of forbidden pleasures.

  No wonder she had run.

  For what did Amber Jones even know of forbidden pleasures? Cameron hadn’t exactly encouraged creativity in the bedroom. Or in any other room come to think of it. And there were times when he’d fallen asleep alongside her and she’d lain there in the dark and wondered if there wasn’t more.

  For surely there had to be more.

  And then she’d seen more in a stranger’s eyes and she’d fled.

  More fool her.

  Damn.

  And not for the first time, she wished she were that strong, independent woman she wanted to be; the way her great-great-great-grandmother must have been, to venture as a young woman of twenty so far from her home amongst the rolling fields of Hertfordshire, in search of adventure in the Middle East all those years ago.

  So courageous.

  But as she pulled her jacket back on she could see why her namesake Amber had wanted to come. Istanbul was everything she’d imagined it must be. Colourful. Historic. Exotic. She might not be half as brave, but already she could see she was going to love her time in Turkey.

  Her stomach rumbled, reminding her that she’d risen and left the hostel before breakfast, sick of slamming doors and a body refusing to sleep when it knew it should be daylight. And there, just across the plaza was one of the carts she’d seen selling bread shaped like bagels and sprinkled with sesame seeds. It would do until she could find something more substantial.

  She was waiting for the bread to be bagged when a hunched old man with a walking stick approached. ‘Inglis?’ he asked, with a gappy smile in a nut-brown face, with skin that looked as if it were made from leather. ‘
American?’

  ‘Australian,’ she said, getting used to the drill, knowing she stood out as a foreigner with her colouring and dress and that she was an easy target for every street vendor going.

  ‘Aussie! Aussie! Aussie!’ he said and his smile became a grin, as if they now shared a common bond. She just nodded and turned her attention to the man with the cart, accepting her bread. ‘I have some coins,’ the man whispered conspiratorially, as if bestowing upon her a favour. ‘Good price. Cheap.’

  She barely glanced his way. Sam had a coin collection and she’d promised to bring home her change to add to the few overseas coins her younger brother already had. But she had no wish to buy more. ‘No, thanks. I’m not interested.’

  ‘Ancient coins,’ he persisted, unmoved, ‘from Troy.’

  That got her interest. ‘From Troy? Really?’ That would make a pretty cool souvenir to take home for Sam.

  ‘Very old. Very cheap.’ He drew her away from the bread cart and pulled something from his pocket, slowly unwinding his nuggety fingers so she could see the grubby coins resting on his palm. ‘For you, special price.’

  He named that price as she peered at the two small discs, wondering how she could tell if they really were coins from that ancient city, wondering if Sam would care if they were fake because they looked as if they could almost be real. But they were way out of her price range anyway. ‘Too much,’ she said, almost regretfully, knowing that her meagre budget would never stretch if she started impulse buying on her first day, only for the man to immediately halve what he was asking.

  ‘Very special price. You buy?’

  Wariness warred with temptation. Converted to Australian dollars, what he was asking for now in Turkish lire was a fraction of the spending money she’d allowed herself. She could afford them—just—if she didn’t splash out on too many other souvenirs. Still...

  She flicked her eyes up to his face. ‘How do I know they’re genuine?’

  His free hand crossed his chest, as if she had offended him. ‘I plough them myself from the ground. In my field.’